Friday, August 3, 2012

I mentioned yesterday the national news coverage of the shooting death of a man handcuffed and sitting in the back of a Jonesboro police patrol car. The matter is under investigation. Police believe the man shot himself with a gun they'd failed to find in a search.

KAIT-TV anchorman Craig Rickert days ago pronounced this a non-event, Blue Arkansas reports in a continuing series on Rickert's political pronouncements.

Within hours of the shooting transpiring, Rickert was telling fans of his Facebook page that “they did check the suspect. it’s on tape. he had the gun stuffed very low in his pants.” and “You’d be surprised how flexible people can be. Trust me, nothing suspicious about this."

Blue Hog Report has some news on a Republican primary challenge of an incumbent legislator, Rep. Laurie Rushing, by Ernie Hinz of Hot Springs.

Republicans, including at least one from Arkansas, are talking about repealing the Dickey Amendment which prohibits gun research from a public health perspective. But none of them are yet willing to DO anything about it.

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The El Dorado School District HAS gone to federal court in response to the state Board of Education's approval, over El Dorado's objection, of the transfer of a white student from El Dorado to the majority white Parkers Chapel School District.

We take a visit to the weekly hot check court in Sherwood District Court, the subject of a recent civil rights lawsuit filed by ACLU Arkansas and others, who say the system there results in a modern-day debtor's prison

A petition drive has begun to encourage a demand that Sen. Jason Rapert pay for the legal fees in defending his Ten Commandments monument proposed for the state Capitol grounds. It's more work by the Satanic Temple, which has fought church-state entanglement around the country.

by Max Brantley

Aug 28, 2016

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A rediscovered violin concerto brings an oft-forgotten composer into the limelight.

My colleagues John Ray and Jesse Bacon and I estimate, in the first analysis of its kind for the 2018 election season, that the president's waning popularity isn't limited to coastal cities and states. The erosion of his electoral coalition has spread to The Natural State, extending far beyond the college towns and urban centers that voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. From El Dorado to Sherwood, Fayetteville to Hot Springs, the president's approval rating is waning.

Despite fierce protests from disabled people, the U.S. House voted today, mostly on party lines, to make it harder to sue businesses for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act. Of course Arkansas congressmen were on the wrong side.